Taft High ushers out Class of 2018

There’s a time for joyA time for tearsA time we’ll treasure through the yearsWe’ll remember alwaysGraduation day

Though we leave in sorrowAll the joys we’ve knownWe can face tomorrowKnowing we’ll never walk alone

When the ivy wallsAre far behindNo matter where our paths may windWe’ll remember alwaysGraduation day

A sea of nearly 100 students draped in black caps and gowns and orange-and-white stoles representing the Taft High 7-12 Class of 2018 marched triumphantly onward into their new lives Saturday at commencement ceremonies in a crowded gymnasium.

Cheers were shared and tears were shed as departing Taft Principal Majalise Tolan introduced the graduates to the future as the tassels were tossed during the hour-long festivities that began at 2:18 p.m. to represent the year 2018.

The ceremony included short farewell speeches filled with well-wishes from co-senior class presidents Naomi Rini and Maya Hatton, and valedictorian and Associated Student Body President Margery Price, whose middle name – appropriately enough — is “Bright.”

A boisterous post-ceremony party was then held for graduates, their schoolmates, family, friends, faculty, staff and administrators in the adjacent school commons before the crowd dispersed and the graduates departed to embark on the next chapter in their lives.

Principal Majalise Tolan’s Farewell Address (Tolan is departing for the position of School Improvement and Secondary Curriculum Administrator with the Lincoln County School District)

Welcome to the Class of 2018!

I would like to start off by thanking the parents, family members, and friends of all of those sitting on this stage today. To say that they wouldn’t be here without you is an understatement. To the Oceanlake, Taft Elementary, and Taft 7-12 staff here today, thank you for joining us at the culminating family engagement event in these students’ educational career.

I would like to thank Director Karen Bondley and Director Liz Martin from the Lincoln County School Board for celebrating with us today. I would also like to thank Sandie Tucker and Diana Elroy. Without their hours of above-and-beyond service to our school, this event would not take place. To Paradise Carpet Cleaners, thank you for once again providing us with fans to try to keep this gym comfortable. And lastly, thank you to Heather Hatton for her graduation photos that will be free for families, friends and graduates and can be found on the Taft 7-12 Facebook page.

Now, to the graduates. The last few weeks have been an exciting time of celebrating your accomplishments and successes while at Taft High School. Your class led the way in many “firsts” for all of us. We had 13 performing groups compete at the state level this year, with many individuals and teams placing. While this may not seem like a big deal, it speaks volumes of your class. You brought us Arts Appreciation Week, the annual Talent Show, and finally won Milli Vanilli, another first for your class! Your class is full of leaders in the arts, sciences, and athletics. To hear a number of you say that you are aspiring to be teachers does not surprise me and inspires me. Teachers give. The Class of 2018 gives.

Whenever needed, the Class of 2018 has been there. Volunteering to help younger students with music lessons, collecting candy, selling ducks, holding fundraisers for other charity groups and organizations, putting up pinwheels, working with the Humane Society, and providing an automotive lesson in the cafeteria and petting zoo in the parking lot are just some of the things you have been involved with. You have fed more than a flame to keep people warm in the winter. Your class has fed the flame to create a positive school culture for the last four years. This work has not gone unnoticed by your school and community, with your class collecting $78,700 in local scholarships alone. Today, I gave each of you a thank you for your time at Taft. On one hand, that was for you, on the other hand it was for you to share. Graduates, take your thank you now to share.

Now, for just a little bit of advice. I first entered Taft 10 years ago for an interview. I was 27 and about to change the educational world. I was sure of it. Graduates, never let anyone tell you that you are too inexperienced or young to follow your heart and passion. I fell in love with its story… a community who cared and a building of staff and students who persevered. In my interview for the assistant principal job I remember the question well. Graduates, this is a constant question for almost any job… always know your answer, and when it changes, be good with that, too. The question was, “Where do you see yourself in five years?” My answer was direct. In five years I would be the principal at the best high school in the state of Oregon. When I accepted the position, I did the most important things I know to do…. go all in, build relationships and love hard.

And it happened. Five years after that interview I was the principal of Taft 7-12. And I quickly learned something….in order to be the principal of the best high school in Oregon, you have to live in the best community and have the most dedicated staff and students. It has to be the perfect storm, if you will, and I was blessed to be on the ship. Louisa May Alcott said, “I am not afraid of storms, for I am learning to sail my own ship.” Graduates, I believe this statement to be true, but only because I have learned that to sail my own ship through storms, a strong crew is needed. During my time at Taft, I had that crew. I believe I am outnumbered 800 to 1 on a daily basis and the ship is sailing. When I leave in a few weeks to take on a new position at the district office, the ship will keep sailing because it is about the culture of the crew, the crew of 800, and the crew here is dedicated, involved and loves hard.

In less than an hour you will be a member of your new adult community – get involved. Don’t leave involvement at the door of Taft 7-12. Keep feeding that flame here or in a new place. Join Kiwanis, Rotary or volunteer at one of the local schools. Find a way to be part of something bigger than yourself. You have made making this school great a priority for four years – keep going. Make everywhere you are and everything you do something great.

Congratulations Class of 2018. You are ready!

ASB President Margery Price’s valedictorian speech:

John Henry Newman, a writer I read for the first time in a class here at Taft, once argued that education is more than simply a transfer of knowledge. He said, “It is education which gives a man a clear, conscious view of their own opinions and judgments, a truth in developing them, an eloquence in expressing them, and a force in urging them.” Classmates– within these walls you have gained an education. Build on it. Use it, not just for the information but for what it taught you.

We are a cohort from the cradle of terror. Of fact. Of bliss. Of social change. We are stepping into the rest of our lives with depth beneath us, force behind us, and a path of unrivaled potential at our feet. We are also the heart of the “tech generation.” It’s no secret. As everyone from teachers to parents to internet preachers likes to remind us, we were born and raised, for the most part, with even the furthest reaches of the planet at our fingertips. As we’ve grown up, this point has often been one of scrutiny. Of scorn. Fellow graduates, do not let it be so.

Do not let the criticism of your generation define your generation. We are connected, yes. But we are better for it. Our connections engage us firsthand in a world changing more rapidly than ever before. They link us to stories beyond all fathomable imagination, to lives calmingly parallel with our own. They link us to headlines and trends and information from every corner of the map, strengthening not only our understanding of the world, but of our place in it. They link us to each other most of all– humans alike, near and far, creative, unique, strong, inspiring, whether we’ve known them for our whole lives or for ten seconds.

And so, my listeners, I implore you– read beyond the book. Read between the lines. Our society has so much to offer you– perspectives, knowledge, opinions, opportunities, libraries, websites, stories, people. The world we live in is full of connections, yes, but they’re worthless if you don’t use them.

Our connections make us citizens. They take what we have learned in school and make it tangible. Social Studies, Psychology, Music, Literature, Mathematics, Science, Art, Business– all these subjects and countless more not only relate to the world, but prepare us for it. Like Newman said, we must use our education and the connections that complement it for the good of not only the world, but of our own minds. We are a resilient, beautiful, and intelligent collection of individuals with unrivaled potential and unfathomable courage, and the bridges we build now will connect our lives for years to come.

At this point in my life, there is not much I can be sure of. There are so many different ways my life could go from here that it’s impossible to predict most everything– except for this: we will change the world. Our generation will change the world. Talented and diverse and unafraid of the wonders forming at our feet, we will rise above those who doubt us and show them they are wrong.

Former longtime Sports Editor of the near-200,000 circulation Las Vegas Review-Journal, Fossum, 60, brings almost 40 years of award-winning experience covering virtually every facet of print and digital journalism to LincolnCityHomepage.com. He is also Editor-in-Chief and Senior Columnist for SilverandBlackToday.com (LVRaidersReport.com), which covers the NFL's Oakland (Las Vegas) Raiders.

Letters To The Editor

What a great job you have done in covering Taft High sports. It is really nice looking forward to your articles right after it happens. The article on the Tigers baseball team was the best written I have ever read.